Pages: 358
Intended Audience: Teens
Genre: Contemporary
Notes for Parents: Contains coarse language, violence, and mature scenes.
The Inside Cover
When
a letter that was never meant to be seen draws high school senior Evan Hansen
into a family’s grief over the loss of their son, Evan is given the chance of a
lifetime to belong. He just has to pretend that the notoriously troubled Connor
Murphy was his secret best friend.
Suddenly,
Evan isn’t invisible anymore—even to the girl of his dreams. And Connor
Murphy’s parents have taken him in like he’s their own, desperate to know more
about their enigmatic son from his “closest friend.” As Evan gets pulled deeper
into the family’s swirl of anger, regret, and confusion, he knows that what
he’s doing can’t be right, but if he’s helping people, how wrong can it be?
No
longer incapacitated by anxiety or hiding from the disappointment in his
mother’s eyes, this new Evan has a purpose. And confidence. Every day is
amazing. Until everything is in danger of unraveling and he comes face-to-face
with his greatest obstacle: himself.
What the cover doesn’t tell
you:
This
is the novelization of the Broadway musical of the same name.
What’s good?
Evan
is a loner who feels invisible to his classmates. Connor is a troubled young
man with a bad reputation. A chance encounter between the two leads to a
misunderstanding that Evan allows to get out of control. Evan is a sympathetic,
relatable teen whose lies, while detrimental, are never perpetrated
maliciously. The plot is simple, but thought-provoking as Evan responds to a
mother’s desperate attempt to connect with her dead son and inadvertently injects
himself into the lives of the grieving family. While there’s a light romance
that threads through the story, the more prevalent themes are grief, truth,
friendship, isolation, family dynamics and the struggle to belong. The pace is steady,
and the writing is good. I liked the ending.
Best Part: Chapters written from Connor’s point of view.
What isn’t good?
The story unfolds…awkwardly. It’s not terrible,
but I have a strong feeling that the story translates much differently (better)
in its original stage musical form.
Worst part: Nothing is terrible.
Recommendation ☺☺☺☺ (3.5/5)
The
story is strong, the characters are well-drawn, and the themes are relevant. And
yet there’s something still lacking. As a novel, it doesn’t seem to gain the
same momentum as the stage show. Having said that, this is still a beautiful
story that deftly showcases a lonely teen’s longing to connect with the people
around him. Recommended.
Emmich, Val, with Steven Levenson, Benj Pasek, & Justin Paul. Dear Evan Hansen: The Novel. New York: Poppy, 2018.